Eureka! was a neat book. It features "mini-chapters' of three or four pages that summarize various concepts in philosophy, science, math, physics, psychology and economics. I have been reading a chapter a night for months but finally grew impatient and finished the book in one fell swoop today. I still don't claim to understand the theory of relativity. But it has been enjoyable to think about some things I have not contemplated in a long time, like Zeno's Paradox, the Cretan Liar's Paradox, Occam's Razor, etc. It's good to push yourself in a different direction from time to time.
Many ideas and names - a little information on each one. I found the writing style to be informative but entertaining enough to keep me interested. (I sometimes have difficulties with nonfiction, especially when I'm just reading for personal edification.) One plus - I finally learned what Occam's Razor was, an idea that seemed to pop up too many times in Stranger in a Strange Land. My reading strategy of laziness has once again been validated- I mostly skip over words or concepts I'm unfamiliar with and hope that the text or life will explain them later!
Nette Idee, kurze Betrachtungen zu Heureka Situationen, bzw. Meme, die die Welt verändert haben. Und interessanterweise Philosophie wie Naturwissenschaft, aber auch Sozialwissenschaft und sogar Architektur: Form follows function. (9/10)
I have to admit a number of things in this book were way over my head. However most weren't and the author has a real talent for taking complicated ideas and explaining them to the average person.
Galileo : Greek astronomer Aristarchus of Samos (for heliocentric hypothesis) as Rosa Parks : [Ida Wells?]
ether or quintessenta--made Aristotle A BITCH!
Philo Scientific method, Hume's Fork, taken for granted today, back then went against conventional ideas about finding truth
p 4 Some materialists--believing that mind is nothing but matter--argue for determinism: scientifically. Since the brain is a physical object, it obeys physical laws; thought and behavior, along with everything else in the universe, follow a determined path. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kan... "natural processes are mechanical and predictable ontological proof" http://sqapo.com/kant.htm
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding http://sqapo.com/hume.htm p 32 more meaningful model of reality based on human pyschology, probability, and habitual behavior. Today Hume is a skeptic--another name for a psychologist or statistician.
Contain a number of interesting factoids which makes it worthy as a reference. Unfortunately, as most of books of this type, lacks depth on the different subjects that are dealt with.